Techmoca
No Result
View All Result
Techmoca
No Result
View All Result
Techmoca
No Result
View All Result
Home News

Krisp nearly triples fundraise with $9M expansion after blockbuster 2020

February 16, 2021
Reading Time: 4min read
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Krisp, a startup that uses machine learning to remove background noise from audio in real time, has raised $9M as an extension of its $5M A round announced last summer. The extra money followed big traction in 2020 for the Armenian company, which grew its customers and revenue by more than an order of magnitude.

TechCrunch first covered Krisp when it was just emerging from UC Berkeley’s Skydeck accelerator, and co-founder Davit Baghdasaryan was relatively freshly out of his previous role at Twilio. The company’s pitch when I chatted with them in the shared office back then was simple and remains the core of what they offer: isolation of the human voice from any background noise (including other voices) so that audio contains only the former.

It probably comes as no surprise, then, that the company appears to have benefited immensely from the shift to virtual meetings and other trends accelerated by the pandemic. To be specific, Baghdasaryan told me that 2020 brought the company a 20x increase in active users, a 23x increase in enterprise accounts and 13x improvement of annual recurring revenue.

The rise in virtual meetings — often in noisy places like, you know, homes — has led to significant uptake across multiple industries. Krisp now has more than 1,200 enterprise customers, Baghdasaryan said: banks, HR platforms, law firms, call centers — anyone who benefits from having a clear voice on the line (“I guess any company qualifies,” he added). Enterprise-oriented controls like provisioning and central administration have been added to make it easier to integrate.

Illustration of six people using a video chat app.

Image Credits: Krisp

B2B revenue recently eclipsed B2C; the latter was likely popularized by Krisp’s inclusion as an option in popular gaming (and increasingly beyond) chat app Discord, though of course users of a free app being given a bonus product for free aren’t always big converters to “pro” tiers of a product.

But the company hasn’t been standing still, either. While it began with a simple feature set (turning background noise on and off, basically) Krisp has made many upgrades to both its product and infrastructure.

Noise cancellation for high-fidelity voice channels makes the software useful for podcasters and streamers, and acoustic correction (removing room echos) simplifies those setups quite a bit as well. Considering the amount of people doing this and the fact that they’re often willing to pay, this could be a significant source of income.

The company plans to add cross-service call recording and analysis; since it sits between the system’s sound drivers and the application, Krisp can easily save the audio and other useful metadata (How often did person A talk versus person B? What office locations are noisiest?). And the addition of voice cancellation — other people’s voices, that is — could be a huge benefit for people who work, or anticipate returning to work, in crowded offices and call centers.

Part of Krisp’s allure is the ability to run locally and securely on many platforms with very low overhead. But companies with machine learning-based products can stagnate quickly if they don’t improve their infrastructure or build more efficient training flows — Lengoo, for instance, is taking on giants in the translation industry with better training as more or less its main advantage.

With AI translation service that rivals professionals, Lengoo attracts new $20M round

Krisp has been optimizing and reoptimizing its algorithms to run efficiently on both Intel and ARM architectures, and decided to roll out its own servers for training its models instead of renting from the usual suspects.

“AWS, Azure and Google Cloud turned out to be too expensive,” Baghdasaryan said. “We have invested in building a data center with Nvidia’s latest A100s in them. This will make our experimentation faster, which is crucial for ML companies.”

Baghdasaryan was also emphatic in his satisfaction with the team in Armenia, where he and his co-founder Arto Minasyan are from, and where the company has focused its hiring, including the 25-strong research team. “By the end of 2021 it will be a 45-member team, all in Armenia,” he said. “We are super happy with the math, physics and engineering talent pool there.”

The funding amounts to $14 million if you combine the two disparate parts of the A round, the latter of which was agreed to just three months after the first. That’s a lot of money, of course, but may seem relatively modest for a company with a thousand enterprise customers and revenue growing by more than 2,000% year over year.

Baghdasaryan said they just weren’t ready to take on a whole B round, with all that involves. They do plan a new fundraise later this year when they’ve reached $15 million ARR, a goal that seems perfectly reasonable given their current charts.

Of course startups with this kind of growth tend to get snapped up by larger concerns, but despite a few offers Baghdasaryan says he’s in it for the long haul — and a multibillion dollar market.

The rush to embrace the new virtual work economy may have spurred Krisp’s growth spurt, but it’s clear that neither the company nor the environment that let it thrive are going anywhere.

————————

Originally published at https://techcrunch.com/2021/02/16/krisp-nearly-triples-fundraise-with-9m-expansion-after-blockbuster-2020/ on February 16, 2021 5:06 pm.

Related Posts

This Week in Apps: Twitter targets creators, Clubhouse security, Spotify’s plans for paid podcasts
News

This Week in Apps: Twitter targets creators, Clubhouse security, Spotify’s plans for paid podcasts

February 27, 2021
Hey millennials, stop ruining emoji for Gen Z
News

Hey millennials, stop ruining emoji for Gen Z

February 27, 2021
Sony’s PlayStation Network experiencing outage Saturday
News

Sony’s PlayStation Network experiencing outage Saturday

February 27, 2021
Can auditing eliminate bias from algorithms?
News

Can auditing eliminate bias from algorithms?

February 27, 2021
This tiny particle accelerator fits in a large room — making it much more practical than CERN’s
News

This tiny particle accelerator fits in a large room — making it much more practical than CERN’s

February 27, 2021
Here are this week’s best gadget deals all in one place
News

Here are this week’s best gadget deals all in one place

February 27, 2021

Recommended

Google is still making its mysterious Fuchsia OS, and now it wants your help

Google is still making its mysterious Fuchsia OS, and now it wants your help

December 8, 2020
Seattle Seahawks’ deep dive into analytics starts with a ‘data lake’ built by Amazon Web Services

Seattle Seahawks’ deep dive into analytics starts with a ‘data lake’ built by Amazon Web Services

November 19, 2020
New leak claims to show what Apple’s AirPods 3 will look like

New leak claims to show what Apple’s AirPods 3 will look like

February 22, 2021
The VC and founder winners of DoorDash’s IPO

The new stimulus bill makes illegal streaming a felony

December 26, 2020
Seattle’s CenturyLink Field, home of the Seahawks and Sounders, to be renamed Lumen Field

Seattle’s CenturyLink Field, home of the Seahawks and Sounders, to be renamed Lumen Field

November 19, 2020
The VC and founder winners of DoorDash’s IPO

Poland’s GeneMe secures €5.2M seed funding for its rapid COVID-19 test

December 26, 2020

© 2020 Techmoca. We aggregate tech news around the world

No Result
View All Result
  • Homepages
    • Home – Layout 1
    • Home – Layout 2
  • Reviews
  • Devices
  • Games

© 2021 JNews - Premium WordPress news & magazine theme by Jegtheme.